Edgar Gaines, 45, of Memphis,
Tennessee, wasn't pleased when a
St. Louis HIV-prevention shindig starring gay black porn legend Sir Bobby Blake exploded in
the mainstream press last fall. That's because Gaines
is Sir Blake—at least to the countless fans who know the
actor and his sizable talent through such videos as Black Leather Gang Bang and Bobby's Big Stick.
Gaines said he doesn't make porn
anymore and plans to forge a future as
a minister. But he "played" Blake at the July 20, 2002, house party for Blacks Assisting Blacks Against AIDS (BABAA), St. Louis' most prominent black AIDS service organization, to
promote condom use among young black men who have sex with men
(public-health types call them MSMs). At the home of BABAA head Erise Williams, Gaines, wearing
only a towel and boots, mingled with guests.
Three months later, disgruntled former BABAA
employee Kevin Coleman furnished the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch and local TV
stations with party photos. He charged that Gaines also stripped and showed his penis and gave lap dances" at
the event—and that boys as young as 16 were present. Although
these claims were never substantiated, St. Louis health director
Hugh Stallworth, MD, grabbed the remaining $6,000 of a $96,000 CDC
grant the group had received to fight syphilis—out of which
Gaines was to be payed $500. "We believe the
individual did
have a limited amount of clothes on," Stallworth told the Post-Dispatch.
"And we deemed it...an inappropriate use of federal
money." A few days later, BABAA's eight-member board fired
Williams and BABAA senior director James Green.
That was hard news for Williams, 35, who said he made
BABAA his "life mission," leading the group for most of its 13
years and widely credited with turning it into a $1.2 million, 28-staffer
agency [see "Conflicts in Pharmaland", POZ, April 2001]. Williams argued
that the July house party was the very sort of event the health department
had long endorsed as an effective safer-sex
intervention - in the past, BABAA had organized such parties, as well as bar
outreaches and workshops. Williams also defended Gaines' physique-baring as just "part of the appeal" to the black MSMs
he needed so badly to reach. He said the real reason he and Green were
fired was that Stallworth told the board "the Republican
administration would...use [the scandal] as a political football to
undermine funding of all ASOs' We were the fall guys."
Talking to POZ, BABAA board vice-chair
Donnell Smith didn't take particular pains to refute Williams, who he
said had brought "vision" and "passion" to the
group. "My funding sources didn't say 'terminate
Erise,' but that's what they meant,"
Smith said. "What good would we be with
no funding?" Similarly, Stallworth confirms he told BABAA's
board that Republicans would politicize the
scandal, adding, "the impression I get
is this is not the best environment or climate
for combating AIDS."
The firing reverberated throughout
the national ASO community, which has increasingly
found itself—and its expenditures—under
the microscope of Bush’s abstinence politics. "It appears to me BABAA used some questionable resources to tap a porn star," said Maurice Franklin of
New York City-based Balm in Gilead, which works with faith-based groups on HIV prevention efforts.
"There's nothing wrong with audits."
But beyond that, Franklin said the BABAA flap
highlights the need for research dollars
to
test whether efforts like Williams'
succeed in preventing HIV among young black MSMs, who studies show have one
of the world's highest infection rates. He said Williams'
booting spurred him and about 20 black MSM prevention workers to meet in
Atlanta last December, to look at ways to support and assess innovative
efforts. He cited, in particular, Los Angeles' AmASSI Center for
helping black MSMs address their sexual identity and health in the
context of their racial heritage.
BABAA's travails also highlight the need for
HIV prevention efforts to find non-federal funding
if they want to do their own thing.
Williams' successor, interim executive director Wilbur L. Campbell, said looking beyond the CDC is one of BABAA's major goals
for 2003.
But BABAA may also have to find resources for budget
items that have nothing to do with prevention. Williams said he is suing
BABAA for unpaid vacation and sick time, and that
he hopes to "make
a public announcement of my efforts soon" to start a new agency in
St. Louis. Kevin Coleman, who describes himself as straight, said he, too,
plans to sue for sexual harassment he experienced from colleagues who
repeatedly insinuated he was gay while he was heading BABAA's youth
center. But he said he'll drop the suit if the group rehires
him - with back pay.
Meanwhile, in Memphis, Edgar Gaines vowed that
"this scandal will not stop me from working, trying to make a
difference in people's lives" as both an ordained minister and
an HIV-prevention spokesperson. He has decided to shelve his alter ego for
good. "I can't be in the porn industry and do this work as well," he said. "It doesn't mix." But Gaines did note that Black Nubian Dreams and other erotic
classics are still available at www.sirbobbyblake.com.